One thing I like about Millennials

originally posted by: NightSkyeB4Dawn
a reply to: BubbaJoe
Several years ago when I realized my elderly mother was not safe to remain so far away from me, over 1200 miles, I made her a proposition.

I suggested she come visit for the winter, and if she didn't like living with me, I would return her to her home, no questions, no coercion, no hard
feelings. The rest is history.

It turned out to be the best thing for both of us. She is 84 going on 18. She is involved in something every day of the week except Thursdays. That is
the only day she is not doing something for the church, the community, a friend, or taking a class.

I think keeping busy keeps her young, health, and sharp. My mother worked in a career field that did not pay women social security until much later,
and when she did become eligible, she hadn't earned enough credits, so her monthly check barely pays for her Medicare. She doesn't ask for much. I
cover all her expenses and my siblings spoil her as much as she will let them, and then some.

My family is very close and tight. We have are battles just like any other family, but we will never let our mother or each other go without.
Something that was ingrained in us growing up poor in the country. It is probably what provided the glue that holds us together.

I salute your family, but that is not the norm. My mother is 77 and a piece of work with past mental issues. While I applaud you and your family,
all situations are not the same.

My siblings both have the economic resources to help my mother, but I am the one that does the everyday things. I make sure she gets fed, she has
been to my sister's twice in the last month, and my brother's once. Hello 31 days in this month.

a reply to: BubbaJoe
I understand. It can be challenging and you have to always be adjusting as the needs change. Simple things create new problems. Like taking the keys,
thank God, she volunteered the keys. Doctors visits, hospitalizations, medications, treatments, diagnostics.

I realize that I am blessed in a lot of ways, and I share the credit for things running a lot smoother than for most, because I do have some amazing
siblings. The biggie, as the primary care giver, is knowing when it is time to take a respite.

originally posted by: NightSkyeB4Dawn
a reply to: BubbaJoe
I understand. It can be challenging and you have to always be adjusting as the needs change. Simple things create new problems. Like taking the keys,
thank God, she volunteered the keys. Doctors visits, hospitalizations, medications, treatments, diagnostics.

I realize that I am blessed in a lot of ways, and I share the credit for things running a lot smoother than for most, because I do have some amazing
siblings. The biggie, as the primary care giver, is knowing when it is time to take a respite.

I need some time off, I would agree with you there. I work for my sister, she is a CPA, and my brother travels constantly. I have not spent 24 hours
outside of this house since 2010.

Kids these days.... They want it all, but they're not willing to sweat for it. If it wasn't for those 'Boomers' you wouldn't have it half as good as
you do right now. But that will fade in time thanks to the baby bonehead Millenials who chose to stop thinking for themselves and instead, blame
everyone else for their own rotten behavior.

Obviously, none of you all ragging on the Millennials have ever met my lazy-ass, moocher Boomer mother. Worst employee I've ever laid eyes on
when I had the displeasure of being in her store as a customer eyeballing her "work" when she didn't know I was in there. Not even the crappiest
Millennial compares.

I don't find I have a lot in common with people my own age (the Mil group, I'm the same age as Projectvxn) But I will give them credit where credit is
due -- IMO from a customer's POV, they're better at CS/retail jobs with customer interaction than the older folks are. By a lot.

used to work at a warehouse where majority were in teens early 20's,they had terrible work ethic,wanted big money for doing nothing,that is not
something to be proud of,just shows their liberal thinking,they are special

If you created everything
The entitlement generation has you to thank
If what you say is true
Then my problems are yours, too

I HAVE WORKED SO HARD
ALL BY MYSELF
I DID IT ALL MYSELF
ALL BY MYSELF

*The entitlement generation is not what you say
Grow your kids in a dish then throw them away
Out on the street at eighteen, never even knowing the way
PUT THEM DOWN, PUT THEM DOWN
"You're so deluded"
PUT THEM DOWN, PUT THEM DOWN
"You're so secluded"
PUT THEM DOWN, PUT THEM DOWN
"You're so polluted"
BUT HYPOCRISY IS ALL YOU GAVE

Kids these days.... They want it all, but they're not willing to sweat for it. If it wasn't for those 'Boomers' you wouldn't have it half as good as
you do right now. But that will fade in time thanks to the baby bonehead Millenials who chose to stop thinking for themselves and instead, blame
everyone else for their own rotten behavior.

It's insane. Last one I had under me would ask for a task, spend two hours not doing it, then ask for another one.

Then he would complain that he couldn't afford the car payments on his car that was worth more than twice the cost of my primary and secondary
vehicles combined.

It can work both ways. A former boss went around the courts so he only had to pay twelve dollars a week for child support but can spend sixty five
thousand dollars on restoring a car. Then when I injured my arm at work I was blamed for it but when I came to work with my left arm in a sling he
changed his tune and tried to appease me with a measly half dollar an hour pay raise.

My body is broken from stress and the work i've done, i'm pretty much a fifty year old in a thirty two year old body. I've had a near fatal
arrhythmia, busted shoulders and wrists, yes maybe I pushed too hard but I gave it my all and that's should count right? of course not.

Some bosses are Truck heads. One former boss never cashed our paychecks because he was literally too busy eating pies!

I don't know the first thing every 19-25 year old, I've had to train, is "What time do we get to take our break?" or "What time do we have to be here
until?" Then while showing them how to do their job its questions like "Do we have to do this?" or "I don't want to do this."

Then there was the 23 year old who after three months of deciding he wanted to do nothing was given the option to come learn something or go home...he
went home. Then showed up the next day freaking out demanding his pay cheque immediately. This was well before payday. He also liked to complain about
how lucky his girlfriend was to get to sit around smoking weed all day and how his life should be nothing but him and his girlfriend hanging out all
day smoking weed.

The only thing I've ever noticed working with millennials is extreme laziness coupled with a fairly extreme sense of entitlement, arrogance
and self-centeredness.

The manager and owner of my shop are noth great. Neither of them treat their staff bad. We're all paid fairly and given fairly free reign as long as
the jobs get done. Personally, I can't complain, I've worked a lot lousier jobs for a lot lousier bosses. Plus its hard to complain to a boss who,
when my age, was busy saving his whole family from Cambodia in the 70's. He's seen more hardship and horror than I can even imagine.

SHHHHHH, the CORP controlled media have people arguing about how lazy the mill are instead of how they are ripping off the workers (all). This is what
the corps want, because the second the people get together and demand better, the corps nuts are clipped.

And also this

If you ask me, if more would treat the corps like they treat us, our work lives would improve.

My man.

No one wants to address the pay stagnation? That even though productivity has increased, the paychecks haven't? Our parents where
making more money. And now, not only do they have to work, but they are competing against workers that should be replacing them.

After working with a handful of them...there's some that have a good work ethic, and work hard and try to learn as much as they can. There's others
that prefer to do nothing, and get insulted when asked to do their job.

So I prefer not to put a "millenial" nametag on anyone. I prefer to judge each person by what they bring to the table, what they're willing to do,
and how they do it. (at work that is.)

This millennial worked for every gd thing he has and is. Come from a broke family that never once was on the government tit. More than eighteen
years paying into a system that will more than likely become insolvent by the time I could utilize any of it.....but I guess that's not important eh?

I'm sure this millennial has gone through more workbooks than some of the long nosers whining about people they've never met.

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